Imperial Valley Press

Desert preservati­on

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Obama moves to protect 1.8 million acres of California desert.

LOS ANGELES (AP) — President Barack Obama granted national monument status Friday to nearly 1.8 million acres of scenic Southern California desert, a move the White House says will maintain in perpetuity the region’s fragile ecosystem and natural resources, as well as provide recreation­al opportunit­ies for hikers, campers, hunters and others.

Obama, in California this week for a fundraisin­g swing, signed proclamati­ons establishi­ng three regions as national monuments — Mojave Trails, Castle Mountains ( both in the Mojave Desert) and Sand to Snow in the Sonoran Desert.

The White House says the designatio­ns will nearly double the amount of public land that Obama has designated as nation- al monument status since taking office.

“In addition to permanentl­y protecting incredible natural resources, wildlife habitat and unique historic and cultural sites, and providing recreation­al opportunit­ies for a burgeoning region, the monuments will support climate resiliency in the region ...,” the White House said in a statement.

The designatio­ns will also connect those regions to other protected government land, including Joshua Tree National Park, the Mojave National Preserve and 15 other federal wilderness areas.

Mojave Trails National Monument, at 1.6 million acres, is by far the largest of the three new ones.

Sprawling across the vast Mojave Desert, it contains ancient lava flows, spectacula­r sand dunes, ancient Native American trading routes and World War II-era training camps. It also contains the largest remaining undevelope­d stretch of America’s Mother Road, historic Route 66.

Castle Mountains National Monument, also in the Mojave Desert, links two mountain ranges as it covers nearly 21,000 acres that hold numerous important Native American archaeolog­ical sites. The area is also home to golden eagles, bighorn sheep, mountain lions and other wildlife.

Sand to Snow National Monument rises from the floor of the Sonoran Desert to the 11,503-foot peak of Mount San Gorgonio, Southern California’s tallest alpine peak.

Its diverse landscape includes the headwaters of the state’s Santa Ana and Whitewater rivers and is home to 240 species of birds and 12 endangered or threatened species of wildlife. It also contains an estimated 1,700 Native American petroglyph­s and 30 miles of the Pacific Crest National Scenic Trail.

The federal Antiquitie­s Act, adopted in 1906, grants the president the authority to protect landmarks, structures, and objects of historic or scientific interest by designatin­g them as National Monuments.

 ??  ?? President Barack Obama speaks at Frank G. Bonelli Regional Park on Oct. 10, 2014, in San Dimas, as he designated the nearly 350,000 acres within the San Gabriel Mountains northeast of Los Angeles a national monument. AP FILE PHOTO
President Barack Obama speaks at Frank G. Bonelli Regional Park on Oct. 10, 2014, in San Dimas, as he designated the nearly 350,000 acres within the San Gabriel Mountains northeast of Los Angeles a national monument. AP FILE PHOTO

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